Tuan_Jim wrote:tiny_acres wrote:You have to be in complete denial to think that Evander was not on the juice.
![[icon_witsend.gif] :witzend:](./images/smilies/icon_witsend.gif)
As a boxing fan I cannot take a warrior of umpteen heroic performances in the ring and slap a 'drug cheat' label on him, just because a few imbeciles on the internet say he is. There's no evidence whatsoever.
The thought of you being called upon to do jury service is genuinely frightening.
What is the evidence that the father of 11, with 7 women is a super-stud on anabolics?
As mentioned his name surfaced in the Orlando bust, from both the Albany Times-Union and from Sports Illustrated. (now from the Herald)
Holyfield’s name does not appear on documents, because the drugs in question were ordered by a patient named “Evan Fields,” whose birthday, Oct. 19, 1962, happens to coincide with Holyfield’s. (Fields’ listed address was “794 Evander, Fairfield, Ga.”) And when the SI reporters dialed the number listed on Evan Fields’ prescription, Holyfield answered the phone.
According to the records of the investigation, Holyfield (or “Fields”) obtained, in June of 2004, testosterone, Glukor and injection supplies, and three weeks later picked up five vials of Human Growth Hormone
In September of the same year, incidentally, “Evan Fields” returned to his urologist, this time to be treated for “hypogonadism.” Two months later, after losing to Larry Donald on a Madison Square Garden undercard, Holyfield was suspended in New York for what NYSAC chairman Ron Scott Stevens cited as “diminished skills.”
To his credit, Holyfield did not at the time avail himself of the obvious avenue of escape. He could, after all, have told Ron Scott Stevens “I don’t have diminished skills. You’d fight that way too if your gonads were the size of a pair of bb’s.”
Dr. Margaret Goodman, now the chief ringside physician for the Nevada State Athletic Commission, told the SI reporters that back in 1994, when Holyfield evinced evidence of a heart defect follwing his loss to Michael Moorer, commission doctors believed the malady to be consistent with HGH use, but since Holyfield denied having used the substance they could not pursue the theory.
The the Boxing News states that a persona using a pseudonym similar to Holyfield, with the same birthdate as Evander Holyfield, at the same address as Evnader Holyfield ordered anabolics. Further Holyfield suffered a heart condition that has been linked to HGH.
Sounds like this is close to a knockdown.